Les Nessman, his bandaid replaced.
The beast at Tanagra.
The Enterprise, in Generations.
Koltar, when he drowned in the swamp.
Armus, on his planet.
Shaka, when the walls fell.
Submitted 11 months ago by FlyingSquid@lemmy.world to risa@startrek.website
https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/2d89811f-9617-4dc4-b072-ca812b6fa7f3.png
Les Nessman, his bandaid replaced.
The beast at Tanagra.
The Enterprise, in Generations.
Koltar, when he drowned in the swamp.
Armus, on his planet.
Shaka, when the walls fell.
🎶WKRP in Shaka🎶
“AS GOD AS MY WITNESS”
Picard at dinner with Lwaxana.
https://tenor.com/view/star-trek-approved-approval-picard-clap-gif-5132586
Nesman, in the parking lot.
The nice thing about this style of communication is that it makes the context explicit, so I can at least look up what you’re talking about. You know, when I have access to a means to search the entirety of a civilization’s works.
“Nesman, in the parking lot.” vs “happy…thanks…giving”
I never watch that scene without laughing uncontrollably.
Dr Fever, his head hungover
God, his witness.
So I figured I would google it, evidently some USian reference… First few links were to when students drop out of Uni or other tertiary education, apparently they are referred to as turkeys, and turkey dropouts. For some reason.
But apparently that is a reference to dropping live turkeys out of a helicopter in a sitcom. It sounds somewhat bloodthirsty, and I do not want to see such a thing, though I can imagine… Terrifyingly that is apparently a reference to a real world event of dropping live turkeys from the back of a moving truck…
Okay. Huh.
I knew Americans were weird about turkeys and have a holiday set aside for them, but this seems ridiculous somehow.
They didn’t actually show the turkeys being dropped.
that seems somewhat a relief.
Is Cincinatti when the turkeys drop considered a good or a bad thing? My wiki walk has led me other places now, but it seemed all to be negative consequences?
lurch@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
Their language is a lot like memes. Harold; holding cup.